Thanks for the quick reply.

I meant mdb_txn_commit (instead of mdb_txn_close), sorry about that.

> If there was a restriction on usage in read-only txns the docs would have 
> said so.

This is what I guessed too.

However I now have a follow-up question: The documentation for mdb_txn_abort() 
says:

"The transaction handle is freed. It and its cursors must not be used again 
after this call, except with #mdb_cursor_renew()."

Could it be worth it to change this to "...except with #mdb_cursor_renew() or 
#mdb_cursor_close()"? This would have cleared the ambiguity for me (and I would 
never have created this thread to begin with).

Regards,
Sam


Jan 24, 2022, 17:43 by [email protected]:

> Sam Dave wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>>
>> The mdb_cursor_close() documentation says: "Its transaction must still be 
>> live if it is a write-transaction."
>>
>>
>> This leads me to my question: For *read-only* transactions, is it allowed to 
>> run mdb_cursor_close() *after* mdb_txn_close() or mdb_txn_abort()?
>>
>
> There is no mdb_txn_close().
>
> If there was a restriction on usage in read-only txns the docs would have 
> said so.
>
> -- 
>  -- Howard Chu
>  CTO, Symas Corp.           http://www.symas.com
>  Director, Highland Sun     http://highlandsun.com/hyc/
>  Chief Architect, OpenLDAP  http://www.openldap.org/project/
>

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